United States Attorney's Office for the District of Minnesota

02/13/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 02/13/2026 15:55

California Man Charged with Interstate Transmission of Threats to Injure Five Federal Law Enforcement Officers

Press Release

California Man Charged with Interstate Transmission of Threats to Injure Five Federal Law Enforcement Officers

Friday, February 13, 2026
For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS - A Minnesota Federal Grand Jury returned a five-count Indictment, charging James Patrick Lyons, age 45, with interstate transmission of threats to injure five federal law enforcement officers on January 18, 2026, United States Attorney Daniel N. Rosen announced today.

According to court documents, on January 14, 2026, in response to an immigration enforcement action, a large group of protesters in Minneapolis vandalized and significantly damaged FBI-owned vehicles, stealing weapons and ammunition, seizing government-owned equipment, and taking documents containing federal employees' phone numbers, email addresses, home addresses, and driver's license numbers. FBI personnel were on scene to investigate an officer-involved shooting and not for any immigration enforcement. Five of the individuals whose personal information was confiscated and broadcast on the Internet were FBI Special Agents.

On January 18, 2026, those five Special Agents received a series of threatening text messages on their government-issued cell phones. Subsequent FBI investigation identified the phone number associated with one particular threatening text message received by the Special Agents as belonging to James Patrick Lyons. All five text messages used similar language and asserted in part that the sender knew who the Special Agents were and where to find them.

The investigation is being conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Assistant United States Attorney Benjamin Bejar is prosecuting the case.

An indictment is only a charge and is not evidence of guilt. The defendant is presumed innocent.

Updated February 13, 2026
Topic
Violent Crime
Component
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